DaKine digs its new digs

Action sports company settles into new waterfront location

Photo by Adam Lapierre.
dakine headquarters? on the Hood River Waterfront, on Portway Ave., gives its staff an open-air feel and has plenty of natural light from the large windows looking north at the Columbia River.

DaKine employees are happily settling in to their new 25,000-square-foot company headquarters, and the move from their aged Columbia Street location to a recently completed Hood River Waterfront building is a welcome change for the current staff nearly 50 who will call the office home.

With an airy, contemporary feel and two stories of floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the Columbia River, the move puts DaKine’s headquarters literally a stone’s throw from its testing grounds and its roots as a premiere manufacture of wind and water sports accessories.

“Being a Hood River resident for over 26 years, it has been great to see the recent development of the waterfront area,” said Chico Bukovanski, DaKine’s national sales manager . “We are proud to move into this new facility with many great amenities for our employees, and to remain a cornerstone of this new waterfront development for many years to come.”

The company has a five-year lease for its space in the building, which was constructed over the last year and is still getting finishing touches to its top floor and roof. The building — one of three built along Portway Ave. in the last two years — features a Northwest contemporary design with a light-industrial element that’s a natural fit for the company’s progressive image and the team of artists, product designers and developers, sales and marketing and customer service that will operate from the Hood River headquarters.

“The new office will allow our employees to focus on what they love most — designing and testing the best action sports accessories and gear on the planet,” Bukovansky said. “The space will (also) afford us an opportunity to continue to expand and further cultivate our product development department.”

Founded in Hawaii and headquartered in Hood River, DaKine now produces a wide range of products for all seasons and terrains. Over the past year, the company has made what it calls “significant investments in product development, including a team expansion of new product designers,” and the space, staff says, will “accommodate not only the brand’s recent growth, but its long-term growth projections as well”

DaKine’s move came after about two decades in its former downtown location to the east of Full Sail Brewing. With that space now vacant, Full Sail, which owns the building, has begun a full-scale renovation of the space that will allow the company to expand its bottling line and house storage and staff offices currently located in the former Expo building owned by the Port of Hood River.

“The idea is to have everything under one roof,” said Greg Knutson, Full Sail’s human resource director. “We are hoping that will be accomplished by this time next year.”

Knutson said expanding bottling operations, which should be complete by the fall, will allow the company to use bulk glass for its beer and keep more of the bottling process in-house.

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Parkdale third graders sing "12 Disaster Days of Christmas"

Welcome to your sing-able Christmas gift list.
What follows is an emergency rendition of “12 Days of Christmas” – for outfitting your home or car in case of snow storm, earthquake, flood or other emergency.
Read it as a simple list, or sing it to the tune of “12 Days” – you know, as in “ … and a partridge in a pear tree…”
Not to make light of it, but the song is a familiar framework for a set of gift ideas that you could consider gathering together, even if the recipient already owns items such as a bunch of coats, tire chains and flashlights. Stores throughout the Gorge are stocked up on all these items. Buying all 12 days might be prohibitive, but here are three ideas for checking any of the dozen off your list (notations follow, 1-12.) The gift items needed to stay warm, dry and safe are also coded to suggest items in your abode (A) in your car (C) or both (B).
12 Gallons of Water (A)
11 Family meals (B)
10 Cans of propane (A)
9 Hygiene bags (B)
8 Packs of batteries (A)
7 Spare coats (B)
6 Bright red flares (C)
5 Cozy blankets (B)
4 Tire chains (C)
3 Flashlights (B)
2 cell phone chargers (B)
1 And a crush-proof first aid kit (B)
Price ranges? Here’s a few quotes for days Three, Two, Four and Nine:
n A family gift of flashlights (three will run $15-30, Hood River Supply, Tum-A-Lum)
n Cell phone chargers (two will run $30-60)
n Tire chains (basic set, $30, Les Schwab, returnable if unused for the winter)
n Family meals ($100 or so should cover the basics for three or four reasonably well-fed days)
n
The home kit should be kept in a handy place near an exit, and remember that water needs to be replenished every few months.
If you have a solid first aid kit already, switch out the gift idea with “and-a-sto-o-u-t- tub-for it-all …”
Otherwise, it’s a case of assembling your home or car kits and making sure all members of the family know what the resources are and how to use them (ie flares and propane).
Emergency situations are at worst life-threatening, at best deeply uncomfortable if you and your family are left without power for an extended period, or traveling and find yourself in a situation where you need to wait out a storm, lengthy traffic delay, or other crisis.
Notes on the 12 gift ideas:
12 – Gallons of water: that’s one per person in a four-member family to last for three days, the recommended minimum to be prepared for utility outages.
11 – Easy-open packaged goods, energy bars, dried food and nuts are good things to include for nutrition. Think of what your family of four needs for three days to stay fortified and hydrated (see number 12). Can-opener also recommended
10 – If you have a propane camping stove, keep extra fuel handy.
9 – Hygiene bags: put packaged moistened towelettes, toilet paper, and plastic ties in large garbage bags (for personal sanitation)
Resource list courtesy of Hood River County Emergency Management, Barbara Ayers, manager/ 541-386-1213.
The county also reminds residents to Get a Kit, Make A Plan to connect your family if separated, and Stay Informed. See www.co.hood-river.or.us to opt-in for citizen alerts. Enlarge